The fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh is about local territories and wider rivalries Kristin Bakke, John O’Loughlin, and Gerard Toal - October 1, 2020 We surveyed people in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia about land and geopolitics.
What’s driving the Belarus protests? Kristin Bakke, John O’Loughlin, and Gerard Toal - August 21, 2020 Our survey reveals some clues, as well as generational divides
Flight MH17 crashed six years ago. Ukrainians have very different views on who’s to blame. Kristin Bakke, John O’Loughlin, and Gerard Toal - July 16, 2020 Russian misinformation may be drowning out factual evidence
It’s Russia Day. What do high-ranking Russians think about the U.S.? Joshua Tucker - June 12, 2020 We get the scoop from William Zimmerman and Sharon Werning Rivera
This covid-19 misinformation went viral. Here’s what we learned. Kate Starbird, Jevin West, and Emma Spiro - May 7, 2020 In less than a day, a handful of influential people can politicize science.
Sen. Tom Cotton suggested Chinese STEM students head home after studying in the U.S. The research shows otherwise. Remco Zwetsloot - April 28, 2020 There’s little evidence of a reverse Chinese brain drain in AI and other cutting-edge fields
Six years and $20 billion in Russian investment later, Crimeans are happy with Russian annexation Kristin Bakke, John O’Loughlin, and Gerard Toal - March 18, 2020 Our survey shows high levels of trust in Putin — though lower than in 2014.
Is Ukraine caught between Europe and Russia? We asked Ukrainians this important question. Kristin Bakke, John O’Loughlin, and Gerard Toal - February 25, 2020 Our new survey shows a divided nation
Is the U.S. losing top tech talent — and global competitiveness? Remco Zwetsloot - February 3, 2020 No, Chinese students aren’t returning to China, according to our data.
How the #MeTooPoliSci Collective is making a difference in political science Nadia E. Brown - August 29, 2019 Here’s the 10th and final article in our series on the gender gap in political science.